TH' Eternal Mind, ev'n heathens understood, Was @3infinitely powerful, wise, and good:@1 In their conceptions, who conceiv'd aright, These three essential attributes unite: They saw, that, wanting any of the three, Such an All-perfect Being could not be. For pow'r, from wisdom suff'ring a divorce, Would be a foolish, mad, and frantic force: If both were join'd, and wanted goodness still, They would concur to more pernicious ill: However nam'd, their action could but tend To weakness, folly, mischief without end. Yet some of old, and some of present hour, Ascribe to God an arbitrary pow'r; An absolute decree; a mere command, Which nothing causes, nothing can withstand: Wisdom and goodness scarce appear in sight; But all is measur'd by resistless might. The verbal question comes to this, in fine, "Is good, or evil, made by @3Will Divine@1, "Or such by @3nature?@1 Does command enact "What shall be right, and then 'tis so in fact? "Or is it right, and therefore, we may draw, "From thence the reason of the righteous law?" Now, tho' tis proof, indisputably plain, That all is right, which @3God@1 shall once ordain; Yet, if a thought shall intervene between Things and commands, 'tis evidently seen That good will be commanded: men divide Nature and laws, which really coincide. From the Divine, Eternal Spirit springs Order, and rule, and rectitude of things; Thro' outward nature, His apparent throne, Visibly seen, intelligibly known: Proofs of a boundless pow'r, a wisdom's aid, By goodness us'd, eternal and unmade. Cudworth perceiv'd, that what divines advance For sov'reignty alone is fate or chance: Fate, after pow'r had made its forcing laws; And chance, before, if made without a cause: Nothing stands firm, or certain, in a state Of fatal chance or accidental fate. Endless perfections, after all, conspire, And to adore excite and to admire; But to plain minds, the plainest pow'r above Is native goodness, to attract our love: Centre of all its various power and skill Is one divine, immutable good-will. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE END OF THE WORLD by GORDON BOTTOMLEY THE WATCH OF A SWAN by SARAH MORGAN BRYAN PIATT THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 98. HE AND I by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI CLEOPATRA by WILLIAM WETMORE STORY THE SAILOR BOY by ALFRED TENNYSON THE WELL by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN THE RETURN OF THE BIRDS by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT |